| Digg it UP |
Hubs | Hubbers | Topics | Request |
| #1 in Business | Subscribe Email Print |
|
You are here: Home > Health and Fitness > Yoga > Relieve Holiday Stress with Yoga |
|
Digg it UP - Relieve Holiday Stress with Yoga
Direct Response Advertising Market Overview call the “Relaxation Response”, as coined by Herbert Benson, MD in his book The Relaxation Response. He has found that regular practice of meditation and deep relaxation techniques quiet the sympathetic nervous system, resulting in the following benefits:
• Reduction or elimination of feelings of stressBRAND IMPERIUM: When planning a direct response campaign, what do you view as some of the biggest challenges out there?LAMMENS: First of all, the fact that TV advertisers are using cable and satellite far more these days, and as a result are growing less dependant on direct response advertisers for revenue. Equally challenging is keeping up with emerging media such as TV and video on demand, Ecast and novel approaches used by the outdoor industry in their bid for the direct response market.BRAND IMPERIUM: Do you welcome the multitude of options, or is it becoming a hindrance?LAMMENS: [laughs] New opportunities are always welcome, although it can be daunting to evaluate all the options. The proliferation of media buying options has made accurate tracking more difficult, and has done the same for effective buy management.BRAND IMP • Improved emotional stability • Decrease in depression and anxiety • Improved concentration • Stronger immune system • Improved sleep • Increased alertness Stress experts point out that the “Relaxation Response” doesn’t occur automatically. It must be learned. In addition, the relaxation response must be activated regularly to produce the long-term changes. During yoga class, students are guided through relaxation at the end of class. No time for yoga? Try this. If you are feeling stressed this holiday season, and simply don’t feel you have time to take a yoga class. Try these quick and simple exercises to help you relax: • Tense and relax: lying on your back, tense and relax your feet, legs, buttocks, abdomen, hands, arms, shoulders/neck and face. Squeeze and relax e Working From Home The High's And Lows! I’m writing this article during the hectic holiday season, on the eve of the arrival of family from out of state who will be staying with us for the week. It’s a hectic time of year, with lots to do and not much time. Before discovering yoga, I would have felt stress, wanting everything to be just right, but I can honestly tell you as I write this that all I feel is a sense of peace, happiness and gratefulness. Of course, this just may be a good day for me. Try me again next week and I may be singing a different tune, but not for long, because yoga always helps me find my way back, and it can do the same for you.The day to day running of an online/home business can at times be the most rewarding task ever, the feeling of completing a target that you set for yourself is the best feeling in the world. But... and it's a huge one... it is so far from easy that you can feel you have gone full circle before success is even sniffable! Pain of rejection is the single most destructive thing to hold you back ever. My home business promoting Phone and Broadband products for Tiscali is just about breaking me down.. so why do we go on? SUCCESS! the desire to succeed. No-one can deny having this inside them and we all want to feel success, to know you have done what you set out to do.Google Adwords is running your costs higher, free ads don't work, cold calling doesn't get the reception you want but you must never give up on the goals you set, using multiple avenues t The American Academy of Family Physicians estimates that 75% to 90% of their patients come for stress related problems. Scientists agree that stress likely causes more heart attack deaths than high cholesterol and smoking combined. A huge body of research shows that stress is implicated in a wide range of health issues: heart disease, stroke, diabetes, arthritis, osteoporosis, asthma, depression, dementia – and the list goes on. The ancient practice of yoga has so many benefits for all of us living in the 21st century. First and foremost, yoga is a time-tested way to deal with the stress we all encounter in our lives. Often we feel that external events are causing us stress and that we have little control over these events. While, it’s true that you can't control things such as time, other people's demands, or mother nature, you can control your reaction to life’s stressors, and yoga is a wonderful way to do just that. Warning Signs of Stress
Recognizing that you are feeling stressed is the first step towards controlling its effects. The following are signs that you may be feeling under stress: 3 Ways Yoga Works to Stop Stress Awareness: When you're stressed you often keep replaying the stressful situation over and over. This "tape" usually plays below your level of conscious awareness. Scientific reports on stress often note that study participants don’t even realize when stress is taking its toll on their bodies and their lives. Yoga postures and breathing exercises are taught in such a way that they demand your attention. They take you out of your head. They focus your attention in your body and teach you how to feel your body. When your focus is on your body, your mind isn't replaying those old stressful tapes. As soon as your mind let's go, your stress levels drop dramatically. Deep Breathing:
Yoga is renowned for its deep breathing techniques. This is a tried and true stress remedy. Within a few minutes of deep breathing, you can physically feel the stress and tension releasing from your body. If you're a shallow breather, you compensate for lack of oxygen by breathing more quickly, causing more muscular tension, increased breathing rate and decreased lung capacity. According to Dr. Robert Freid, author of The Breath Connection, the following health problems are directly related to shallow breathing: The Relaxation Response
Yoga teaches what scientists call the “Relaxation Response”, as coined by Herbert Benson, MD in his book The Relaxation Response. He has found that regular practice of meditation and deep relaxation techniques quiet the sympathetic nervous system, resulting in the following benefits:
• Reduction or elimination of feelings of stress Stress experts point out that the “Relaxation Response” doesn’t occur automatically. It must be learned. In addition, the relaxation response must be activated regularly to produce the long-term changes. During yoga class, students are guided through relaxation at the end of class. No time for yoga? Try this. If you are feeling stressed this holiday season, and simply don’t feel you have time to take a yoga class. Try these quick and simple exercises to help you relax: • Tense and relax: lying on your back, tense and relax your feet, legs, buttocks, abdomen, hands, arms, shoulders/neck and face. Squeeze and relax ea A Guide to Website Promotion -- Part Two ing in the 21st century. First and foremost, yoga is a time-tested way to deal with the stress we all encounter in our lives. Often we feel that external events are causing us stress and that we have little control over these events. While, it’s true that you can't control things such as time, other people's demands, or mother nature, you can control your reaction to life’s stressors, and yoga is a wonderful way to do just that.Now that you are familiar with the most important search engines and linking strategies, you should not ignore other promotion tools that will enhance your website promotion efforts.3. Traditional Media StrategiesWebsite promotion should be a mix of online and offline strategies. Traditional media tools apply successfully to increase traffic and get more visitors.Promote your website URL on business cards, stationery and company documents.Don’t ignore the importance of the traditional media. Include your URL in any display in newspapers, magazines and so on. Many people do use the yellow and white pages to search for services. Make sure your company is listed and provide the URL along your listing as well.Send your clients business greeting cards on proper occasions. These will act as reminders and help maintain good comm Warning Signs of Stress
Recognizing that you are feeling stressed is the first step towards controlling its effects. The following are signs that you may be feeling under stress: 3 Ways Yoga Works to Stop Stress Awareness: When you're stressed you often keep replaying the stressful situation over and over. This "tape" usually plays below your level of conscious awareness. Scientific reports on stress often note that study participants don’t even realize when stress is taking its toll on their bodies and their lives. Yoga postures and breathing exercises are taught in such a way that they demand your attention. They take you out of your head. They focus your attention in your body and teach you how to feel your body. When your focus is on your body, your mind isn't replaying those old stressful tapes. As soon as your mind let's go, your stress levels drop dramatically. Deep Breathing:
Yoga is renowned for its deep breathing techniques. This is a tried and true stress remedy. Within a few minutes of deep breathing, you can physically feel the stress and tension releasing from your body. If you're a shallow breather, you compensate for lack of oxygen by breathing more quickly, causing more muscular tension, increased breathing rate and decreased lung capacity. According to Dr. Robert Freid, author of The Breath Connection, the following health problems are directly related to shallow breathing: The Relaxation Response
Yoga teaches what scientists call the “Relaxation Response”, as coined by Herbert Benson, MD in his book The Relaxation Response. He has found that regular practice of meditation and deep relaxation techniques quiet the sympathetic nervous system, resulting in the following benefits:
• Reduction or elimination of feelings of stress Stress experts point out that the “Relaxation Response” doesn’t occur automatically. It must be learned. In addition, the relaxation response must be activated regularly to produce the long-term changes. During yoga class, students are guided through relaxation at the end of class. No time for yoga? Try this. If you are feeling stressed this holiday season, and simply don’t feel you have time to take a yoga class. Try these quick and simple exercises to help you relax: • Tense and relax: lying on your back, tense and relax your feet, legs, buttocks, abdomen, hands, arms, shoulders/neck and face. Squeeze and relax e P2P Networks Feeling under the weather: Stress affects your immune system. A new report found that those under stress are 3 to 4 times more likely to develop a cold.P2P (peer to peer) networks can be classified broadly into two categories, pure and hybrid. Pure P2P networks have peers as both client and server, and do not have either a central server to manage the network, or central router. The hybrid P2P network, on the other hand, has a central server that has information on peers and provides that information on request, and holds peers responsible for hosting and sharing the resources.One of the biggest advantages of P2P networks is that all its users provide resources, including bandwidth, computing power, and storage space. Thus, as users log in and the demand on the system increases, the total system capacity also increases. However, this is not true of a client-server architecture which has a fixed set of servers, and adding more clients means slower data transfer for all users.Moreover, the dis • Weight gain: Many people find that stress triggers emotional eating. Also, much research has shown that the stress hormone, Cortisol, is a culprit in weight gain because it causes an increase in appetite, while also causing fat to be deposited instead of burned. 3 Ways Yoga Works to Stop Stress Awareness: When you're stressed you often keep replaying the stressful situation over and over. This "tape" usually plays below your level of conscious awareness. Scientific reports on stress often note that study participants don’t even realize when stress is taking its toll on their bodies and their lives. Yoga postures and breathing exercises are taught in such a way that they demand your attention. They take you out of your head. They focus your attention in your body and teach you how to feel your body. When your focus is on your body, your mind isn't replaying those old stressful tapes. As soon as your mind let's go, your stress levels drop dramatically. Deep Breathing:
Yoga is renowned for its deep breathing techniques. This is a tried and true stress remedy. Within a few minutes of deep breathing, you can physically feel the stress and tension releasing from your body. If you're a shallow breather, you compensate for lack of oxygen by breathing more quickly, causing more muscular tension, increased breathing rate and decreased lung capacity. According to Dr. Robert Freid, author of The Breath Connection, the following health problems are directly related to shallow breathing: The Relaxation Response
Yoga teaches what scientists call the “Relaxation Response”, as coined by Herbert Benson, MD in his book The Relaxation Response. He has found that regular practice of meditation and deep relaxation techniques quiet the sympathetic nervous system, resulting in the following benefits:
• Reduction or elimination of feelings of stress Stress experts point out that the “Relaxation Response” doesn’t occur automatically. It must be learned. In addition, the relaxation response must be activated regularly to produce the long-term changes. During yoga class, students are guided through relaxation at the end of class. No time for yoga? Try this. If you are feeling stressed this holiday season, and simply don’t feel you have time to take a yoga class. Try these quick and simple exercises to help you relax: • Tense and relax: lying on your back, tense and relax your feet, legs, buttocks, abdomen, hands, arms, shoulders/neck and face. Squeeze and relax e The Tale That Dogs the WAG atically.Glancing through the red-tops on certain days over the past few weeks, one could be forgiven for thinking that England’s World Cup bid revolved not around 11 strapping male athletes on the pitch in Gelsenkirchen, but rather the occasionally dubious antics of a group of Cristal fuelled, bejewelled glamour queens in Manolo Blahniks and oversized sunglasses.Certainly this does not constitute any great departure from form on the part of either the tabloid reporters or the WAGs themselves. The likes of Victoria Beckham (ne? Posh Spice), Coleen Mcloughlin et al enjoy a tumultuous but mutually beneficial relationship with the tabloid press the year round; the designer label and conspicuous consumption led lifestyle financed by their HABs’ (Husbands and Boyfriends’) nosebleed-inducing salaries providing the perfect fodder for the type of journalist that esc Deep Breathing:
Yoga is renowned for its deep breathing techniques. This is a tried and true stress remedy. Within a few minutes of deep breathing, you can physically feel the stress and tension releasing from your body. If you're a shallow breather, you compensate for lack of oxygen by breathing more quickly, causing more muscular tension, increased breathing rate and decreased lung capacity. According to Dr. Robert Freid, author of The Breath Connection, the following health problems are directly related to shallow breathing: The Relaxation Response
Yoga teaches what scientists call the “Relaxation Response”, as coined by Herbert Benson, MD in his book The Relaxation Response. He has found that regular practice of meditation and deep relaxation techniques quiet the sympathetic nervous system, resulting in the following benefits:
• Reduction or elimination of feelings of stress Stress experts point out that the “Relaxation Response” doesn’t occur automatically. It must be learned. In addition, the relaxation response must be activated regularly to produce the long-term changes. During yoga class, students are guided through relaxation at the end of class. No time for yoga? Try this. If you are feeling stressed this holiday season, and simply don’t feel you have time to take a yoga class. Try these quick and simple exercises to help you relax: • Tense and relax: lying on your back, tense and relax your feet, legs, buttocks, abdomen, hands, arms, shoulders/neck and face. Squeeze and relax e Choose the Right Realtor call the “Relaxation Response”, as coined by Herbert Benson, MD in his book The Relaxation Response. He has found that regular practice of meditation and deep relaxation techniques quiet the sympathetic nervous system, resulting in the following benefits:
• Reduction or elimination of feelings of stressFor most people, their home is the biggest investment of their life. Whether you're buying or selling a home, you want to be sure you're maximizing that investment. Choosing the right Realtor can make a big difference in how fast you find or sell a house, the price you pay or receive and the smooth completion of the transaction.You'll need to do some research to find the one that's right for you. It's not hard, but it will take a little time; however, finding the right match will pay off in the long run. Here are some tips from AHA:Go with a ProThe terms agent, broker and Realtor are often used interchangeably. But not all agents or brokers are Realtors. The term "Realtor" identifies a real estate professional who is a member of the National Association of Realtors and subscribes to its strict code of ethics, which in some cases goes b • Improved emotional stability • Decrease in depression and anxiety • Improved concentration • Stronger immune system • Improved sleep • Increased alertness Stress experts point out that the “Relaxation Response” doesn’t occur automatically. It must be learned. In addition, the relaxation response must be activated regularly to produce the long-term changes. During yoga class, students are guided through relaxation at the end of class. No time for yoga? Try this. If you are feeling stressed this holiday season, and simply don’t feel you have time to take a yoga class. Try these quick and simple exercises to help you relax: • Tense and relax: lying on your back, tense and relax your feet, legs, buttocks, abdomen, hands, arms, shoulders/neck and face. Squeeze and relax each area three times before allowing that area of the body to completely relax. Pay special attention to your shoulders and neck, hunching/squeezing this area, and then allowing this area to completely relax. When we are stressed, the muscles in the neck and shoulders are often the first to become tense. • Deep abdominal breath: Lie on your back, relax your belly and breathe deeply through the nose, allowing your belly to expand on inhale and relax on exhale. Focus on your breath, allowing any other thoughts to pass. Keep your attention on the present moment and on your breath. You will often find that everything is fine in this moment and that we are usually simply worrying about a future event or a past regret. Do your best to notice the signs of stress and take a moment to relax and let go of those feelings. Soon, it will become second nature and you will feel a greater sense of ease. To learn more about yoga exercises to relieve stress, visit: www.yogatg.com/ys-stress-headache-1.html. Nancy Wile, Ed.D. is the founder of Yoga To Go – a yoga organization that provides simple and effective yoga programs for busy people around the world. You can subscribe to her free yoga and fitness newsletter at: www.YogaTG.com.
HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
Related Articles:Internet Marketing - The Importance of the Sales Funnel
|